Literature DB >> 17138220

Effectiveness of switching from adjuvant tamoxifen to anastrozole in postmenopausal women with hormone-sensitive early-stage breast cancer: a meta-analysis.

Walter Jonat1, Michael Gnant, Francesco Boccardo, Manfred Kaufmann, Alessandra Rubagotti, Ivan Zuna, Mike Greenwood, Raimund Jakesz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: For more than 20 years, tamoxifen has been the mainstay of adjuvant endocrine therapy for women with hormone-sensitive early-stage breast cancer. However, not only does tamoxifen have potential side-effects such as an increased risk of endometrial cancer and thromboembolic events, but patients can also develop resistance to the drug. We aimed to investigate whether switching treatment of postmenopausal women with such breast cancer to anastrozole after 2-3 years of tamoxifen would be more effective than continuing on tamoxifen for a total of 5 years.
METHODS: We did a meta-analysis of three clinical trials--the Austrian Breast and Colorectal Cancer Study Group (ABCSG 8), Arimidex-Nolvadex (ARNO 95), and the Italian Tamoxifen Anastrozole (ITA) studies--in which postmenopausal women with histologically confirmed, hormone-sensitive early-stage breast cancer were randomised to 1 mg/day anastrozole (n=2009) after 2-3 years of tamoxifen treatment or to continued 20 or 30 mg/day tamoxifen (n=1997). We analysed the data with a stratified Cox proportional hazards model with the covariates of age, tumour size, nodal status, grade, surgery, and chemotherapy.
FINDINGS: Patients who switched to anastrozole had fewer disease recurrences (92 vs 159) and deaths (66 vs 90) than did those who remained on tamoxifen, resulting in significant improvements in disease-free survival (hazard ratio 0.59 [95% CI 0.48-0.74]; p<0.0001), event-free survival (0.55 [0.42-0.71]; p<0.0001), distant recurrence-free survival (0.61 [0.45-0.83]; p=0.002), and overall survival (0.71 [0.52-0.98]; p=0.04).
INTERPRETATION: Our results show that the clinical benefits in terms of event-free survival seen in individual trials for those patients who switched to anastrozole translate into a benefit in overall survival. These findings confirm that clinicians should consider switching postmenopausal women who have taken adjuvant tamoxifen for 2-3 years to anastrozole.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17138220     DOI: 10.1016/S1470-2045(06)70948-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet Oncol        ISSN: 1470-2045            Impact factor:   41.316


  34 in total

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Review 4.  The sequential use of endocrine treatment for advanced breast cancer: where are we?

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6.  Anastrozole Use in Early Stage Breast Cancer of Post-Menopausal Women.

Authors:  Monica Milani; Gautam Jha; David A Potter
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Review 7.  Treatment strategies that effectively reduce early recurrence risk in postmenopausal women with endocrine-sensitive breast cancer: AIs upfront vs. switching.

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Review 8.  The expanding use of third-generation aromatase inhibitors: what the general internist needs to know.

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Review 9.  Tamoxifen: the drug that came in from the cold.

Authors:  L Hughes-Davies; C Caldas; G C Wishart
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2009-08-11       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  The Gene expression Grade Index: a potential predictor of relapse for endocrine-treated breast cancer patients in the BIG 1-98 trial.

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Journal:  BMC Med Genomics       Date:  2009-07-02       Impact factor: 3.063

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